Following recent events in the Broken Isles, a link has been created between Azeroth and Kil'jaeden's homeworld of Argus, bringing the Burning Legion closer than ever to destroying Azeroth. In order to stop them once and for all, Illidan and Velen are taking the war directly to the surface of Argus, where they hope to join forces with Alleria, Turalyon, and the Army of the Light to launch an all-out assault on the Legion's primary base of operations.

Board the Vindicaar, a vessel that will serve as your mobile base of operations on Argus, as well as one of your few safe havens on the planet.

As you explore Argus, you’ll visit new locations across the planet, experiencing the epic conclusion to the Legion storyline and unlocking new world quests and other content along the way.

Invasion Points

Azeroth isn’t the only world connected to this hostile place. While on Argus, you’ll unlock the ability to enter the very portals the Burning Legion use to transport to other worlds. Once there, complete an event or defeat a boss to earn epic rewards.

New Dungeon: Seat of the Triumvirate

Once the heart of the ancient eredar civilization where Velen, Archimonde, and Kil’jaeden ruled their people, this temple has fallen to ruin. Return with Velen to retrieve an ancient relic of power, and battle the darkness that has overtaken this sacred place, in a new 5-person dungeon among the ruins of Mac’Aree on Argus, featuring four bosses:

Zuraal the Ascended

Saprish

Viceroy Nezhar

L'ura

Changes

User Interface

A "Summon Random Favorite Battle Pet" button has been added to the Pet Journal.

Legendary quests now display as orange markers on the world map.

Legion dungeon and raid maps now have clickable icons where sub-maps connect, making it easier to navigate between floors.

Mount and pet unlocks now have a unique toast.

The Dressing Room pane is now larger.

The Shop has a new checkout interface.

You can now turn left and right with the Move Pad accessibility feature.

Blizzard Entertainment’s two-day gaming convention and community celebration returns to the Anaheim Convention Center on November 3 and 4—but it’s not too early to begin preparations for a weekend full of hands-on gaming, in-depth developer panels, incredible esports competition, and more.

As some of you may have heard, CloudFlare had a leak yesterday. We just want to reassure everyone that we are aware of the fact and that while we do use them, we do not appear to have been impacted in any way. This is what they sent to us:

Originally Posted by cloudflare

Dear MMOUI,

Thursday afternoon, we published a blog post describing a memory leak caused by a serious bug that impacted Cloudflare's systems. If you haven't yet, I encourage you to read that post on the bug:

While we resolved the bug within hours of it being reported to us, there was an ongoing risk that some of our customers' sensitive information would still be available through third party caches, such as the Google search cache.

Over the last week, we've worked with these caches to discover what customers may have had sensitive information exposed and ensure that the caches are purged. We waited to disclose the bug publicly until after these caches could be cleared in order to mitigate the ability of malicious individuals to exploit any exposed data.

In our review of these third party caches, we discovered exposed data on approximately 150 of Cloudflare's customers across our Free, Pro, Business, and Enterprise plans. We have reached out to these customers directly to provide them with a copy of the data that was exposed, help them understand its impact, and help them mitigate that impact.

Your domain is not one of the domains where we have discovered exposed data in any third party caches. The bug has been patched so it is no longer leaking data. However, we continue to work with these caches to review their records and help them purge any exposed data we find. If we discover any data leaked about your domains during this search, we will reach out to you directly and provide you full details of what we have found.

To date, we have yet to find any instance of the bug being exploited, but we recommend if you are concerned that you invalidate and reissue any persistent secrets, such as long lived session identifiers, tokens or keys. Due to the nature of the bug, customer SSL keys were not exposed and do not need to be rotated.

Again, if we discover new information that impacts you, we will reach out to you directly. In the meantime, if you have any questions or concerns, please don’t hesitate to reach out.

Due to the failing economy, and the inability for small businesses to keep afloat, I am being forced to look for a new job. I knew it was a possibility, since dedicated IT Personel are often a luxury in small businesses. Consultants are just much more cost effective, and you don't have to give them benefit packages.

With that said, I was running wowcompares at work, and with the upcoming loss of job I am being forced to find a new home for it. This is not as difficult as it sounds, as Dolby has already graciously given me permission to host it on the wowinterface network.

Unfortunately the time table is such that he will not be able to get me up and running until he gets back from vacation. This may or may not be after my last day at work, so I have opted to take the site down now, with the promise that it will be back within the next 2 to 3 weeks.

Please be patient. With the downtime I plan to make changes to the site structure, and get it ready for the new host. I have wanted to make a lot of improvements for a while now, but never had the time to do it. Stay tuned, and don't count wowcompares out yet! With the new host I may also be looking to add additional people to the team so that updates happen more often.

Author Credit is given on a simple basis. We credit the person who sends the mod in, and says "I wrote this" if you see your work here, and its credited to someone else contact us first using the link at the bottom of the site. Please remember more than one person can make the same mod.